To investigate whether saliva could be used for diagnosis of recent dengue, serum and saliva samples were collected simultaneously from patients with suspected dengue infection. Sera (1:10 dilution) and saliva (undiluted) were tested by using an IgM capture enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (MAC-ELISA) with minor modifications (serum and saliva absorption for 3 h at 37 degrees C). The quality of saliva was evaluated by determining the IgG total concentration (enzyme immunoassay) which ranged from 2.7 to > 50 mg/l. Recent dengue infection was confirmed in 38 cases. Forty-six serum and saliva specimens were collected from these patients 1-30 days after the onset of symptoms. IgM was detected in 65.8% saliva samples. High rate of positivity ( > 80%) was observed for the saliva samples collected > or = 5 days after the onset of the disease. Fifty serum and saliva samples from other 32 patients with rash diseases were also tested and all the specimens were unreactive by MAC-ELISA. These results indicate that saliva may be a convenient non-invasive alternative to serum for diagnosis of recent dengue fever infection, especially for epidemiological studies during outbreaks of the disease.